Pilot Flying J is Haslam’s company. It was accused of “jacking the discounts,” or paying fuel rebates to trucking companies that were below the prescribed amounts. Pilot Flying J will have to pay $92 million in fines and $56 million in restitution.

It does not appear Haslam will be charged personally. But one suspects the “discount jacking” might have been a tad more distracting for the franchise than the antics of Manziel, especially because training camp barely has started.

We all know Manziel should start trying to win the starting QB job and quit trying to win the lead role in “The Hangover 4.” But then the boogie nights never seemed to hurt the games of Bobby Layne, Joe Namath, Brett Favre, Ben Roethlisberger, etc.

The Browns knew Manziel wasn’t a candidate for the priesthood when they drafted him in the first round. They knew they were taking a major crossover celebrity. The thumb-rubbing Manziel showed up in more places than Zelig. But as Manziel’s Browns jersey soared to the top of the NFL merchandise chart before he had taken his first snap, Haslam was not heard to complain.

Manziel’s behavior will take care of itself. If he doesn’t study tape and doesn’t practice well, Brian Hoyer will be Cleveland’s starter. Impulsiveness doesn’t work in the NFL, which is the cue for mentioning Haslam has fired two coaches, two general managers, a team CEO and a president in less than 22 months of ownership.

Nobody says a word when Peyton Manning and Drew Brees make dozens of time-consuming TV ads. Manziel is right when he says he’s entitled to down time.

The headlines are waiting for him on the field, where he’ll rise or fall based on his performance. His owner should take care of business, too.